View Source RDF.Turtle (RDF.ex v0.11.0)

RDF.Turtle provides support for the Turtle serialization format.

See RDF.Turtle.Decoder and RDF.Turtle.Encoder for the available options on the read and write functions.

For more on Turtle see https://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/.

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Functions

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a file.

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a file.

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a stream.

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a stream.

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a string.

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a string.

Serializes a RDF data structure to a file.

Serializes a RDF data structure to a file.

Serializes a RDF data structure to a string.

Serializes a RDF data structure to a string.

Link to this section Functions

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read_file(file, opts \\ [])

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Specs

read_file(
  Path.t(),
  keyword()
) :: {:ok, RDF.Graph.t() | RDF.Dataset.t()} | {:error, any()}

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a file.

It returns an {:ok, data} tuple, with data being the deserialized graph or dataset, or {:error, reason} if an error occurs.

options

Options

General serialization-independent options:

  • :stream: Allows to enable reading the data from a file directly via a stream (default: false on this function, true on the bang version)
  • :gzip: Allows to read directly from a gzipped file (default: false)
  • :file_mode: A list with the Elixir File.open modes to be used for reading (default: [:read, :utf8])

See the module documentation of the decoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the decoder.

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read_file!(file, opts \\ [])

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Specs

read_file!(
  Path.t(),
  keyword()
) :: RDF.Graph.t() | RDF.Dataset.t()

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a file.

As opposed to read_file/2, it raises an exception if an error occurs and defaults to stream: true.

See read_file/3 for the available format-independent options.

See the module documentation of the decoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the decoder.

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read_stream(stream, opts \\ [])

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Specs

read_stream(
  Enumerable.t(),
  keyword()
) :: {:ok, RDF.Graph.t() | RDF.Dataset.t()} | {:error, any()}

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a stream.

It returns an {:ok, data} tuple, with data being the deserialized graph or dataset, or {:error, reason} if an error occurs.

See the module documentation of the decoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the decoder.

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read_stream!(stream, opts \\ [])

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Specs

read_stream!(
  Enumerable.t(),
  keyword()
) :: RDF.Graph.t() | RDF.Dataset.t()

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a stream.

As opposed to read_stream/2, it raises an exception if an error occurs.

See the module documentation of the decoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the decoder.

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read_string(content, opts \\ [])

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Specs

read_string(
  String.t(),
  keyword()
) :: {:ok, RDF.Graph.t() | RDF.Dataset.t()} | {:error, any()}

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a string.

It returns an {:ok, data} tuple, with data being the deserialized graph or dataset, or {:error, reason} if an error occurs.

See the module documentation of the decoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the decoder.

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read_string!(content, opts \\ [])

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Specs

read_string!(
  String.t(),
  keyword()
) :: RDF.Graph.t() | RDF.Dataset.t()

Deserializes a graph or dataset from a string.

As opposed to read_string/2, it raises an exception if an error occurs.

See the module documentation of the decoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the decoder.

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write_file(data, path, opts \\ [])

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Specs

write_file(RDF.Data.t(), Path.t(), keyword()) :: :ok | {:error, any()}

Serializes a RDF data structure to a file.

It returns :ok if successful or {:error, reason} if an error occurs.

options

Options

General serialization-independent options:

  • :stream: Allows to enable writing the serialized data to the file directly via a stream. Possible values: :string or :iodata for writing to the file with a stream of strings respective IO lists, true if you want to use streams, but don't care for the exact method or false for not writing with a stream (default: false on this function, :iodata on the bang version)
  • :gzip: Allows to write directly to a gzipped file (default: false)
  • :force: If not set to true, an error is raised when the given file already exists (default: false)
  • :file_mode: A list with the Elixir File.open modes to be used for writing (default: [:write, :exclusive])

See the module documentation of the encoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the encoder.

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write_file!(data, path, opts \\ [])

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Specs

write_file!(RDF.Data.t(), Path.t(), keyword()) :: :ok

Serializes a RDF data structure to a file.

As opposed to write_file/3, it raises an exception if an error occurs.

See write_file/3 for the available format-independent options.

See the module documentation of the encoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the encoder.

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write_string(data, opts \\ [])

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Specs

write_string(
  RDF.Data.t(),
  keyword()
) :: {:ok, String.t()} | {:error, any()}

Serializes a RDF data structure to a string.

It returns an {:ok, string} tuple, with string being the serialized graph or dataset, or {:error, reason} if an error occurs.

See the module documentation of the encoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the encoder.

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write_string!(data, opts \\ [])

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Specs

write_string!(
  RDF.Data.t(),
  keyword()
) :: String.t()

Serializes a RDF data structure to a string.

As opposed to write_string/2, it raises an exception if an error occurs.

See the module documentation of the encoder for the available format-specific options, all of which can be used in this function and will be passed them through to the encoder.